| Would be interested to know your reaction to the following article, from CBS Market Watch. 
 
 
 
 
 Indie E&P sector unearths new metric
 Old rules for exploration and production no longer apply, analysts say
 
 By Kristen Gerencher, CBS
 MarketWatch
 Last Update: 5:34 PM ET Mar 14, 2000
 Personal Finance News
 Mutual Fund Center
 
 HOUSTON, Texas (CBS.MW) -- Has the well of investing
 wisdom run dry in the independent oil and gas
 exploration and production sector?
 
 Not yet, but fundamental changes in
 the industry should convince investors
 to raise their standards, according to a
 new report by energy industry research
 firm Simmons & Company.
 
 A schism beneath the surface of E&P
 stocks is calling for a new way to
 evaluate them, analysts say. Crude oil
 prices have tripled from their year-ago
 lows while stocks have languished in
 the last six months, so historical
 yardsticks like cash flow no longer
 measure up.
 
 "The metric is shifting," Dan Pickering,
 managing director of research, told
 CBS.MarketWatch.com. "It's saying forget about growth.
 These guys can't grow fast anymore."
 
 Tougher physical environment
 
 Pickering and macro energy analyst Dave Pursell said
 firms should ground themselves in geological reality.
 Since oil-producing basins are maturing rapidly,
 companies have to drill more wells this year than last
 year just to keep production flat. Meanwhile,
 independents in the capital-intensive industry now face
 the same earnings pressure as their big oil counterparts.
 
 "For years E&P got paid in the stock market to grow
 volumes," said Pickering. "Now the demand from
 shareholders [is] to grow volumes profitably. That is a
 sea change for a lot of these companies to think about
 and no longer kid themselves about what the returns are
 associated with projects."
 
 Simmons followed 18 E&P companies in the report,
 including Apache (APA: news, msgs), Anadarko (APC:
 news, msgs), Burlington Resources (BR: news, msgs),
 Barrett Resources (BRR: news, msgs), Devon Industries
 (DVN: news, msgs), EOG Resources (EOG: news, msgs),
 Forest Oil (FST: news, msgs), Kerr-McGee (KMG: news,
 msgs), Louis Dreyfus Natural Gas (LD: news, msgs),
 Mitchell Energy & Development (MNDA: news, msgs),
 Newfield Exploration (NFX: news, msgs), Ocean Energy
 (OEI: news, msgs), Pogo Producing Company (PPP: news,
 msgs), Stone Energy (SGY: news, msgs), Unocal (UCL:
 news, msgs), Union Pacific Resources (UPR: news,
 msgs), Vintage Petroleum (VPI: news, msgs), and Vastar
 Resources (VRI: news, msgs).
 
 From 1993 to 1998, these companies' average return on
 capital was about 6 percent, while the cost of capital was
 12 percent, said Pickering. "That alone should tell you
 something has to change. That's what the market has
 been willing to ignore for the last quite a few years, and
 we don't think they're willing to ignore it anymore."
 
 Harder scrutiny
 
 Mark Meyer, Simmons' lead E&P
 analyst, said  companies need to be
 more disciplined investors and better
 financial managers who execute on
 their reserves. In the meantime, retail
 investors should be looking for an
 initial multiple range of 15 to 25 times
 earnings as well as the more elusive
 factor of returns.
 
 "That requires you to look individually
 at companies with a much harder
 scrutiny along several more complex
 dimensions," said Meyer. "If you accept
 E&P for what it is -- and I've
 characterized it as cyclical, (with) low
 margins (and) problematic returns --
 then there's really no rationale for the
 group to trade on any kind of premium
 to other cyclical sectors that offer maybe
 more earnings stability or a little bit
 better growth than earnings or better
 returns."
 
 The attraction of cheap prices has worn off and been
 replaced with questions of whether a company's
 generating strong returns, if it's drilling in basins with
 good money-making potential, and if it's a good operator,
 said Meyer.
 
 Some companies have embraced the call for change more
 readily than others, said Pickering, who estimates the
 transition will take 12 to 24 months to sink in. "It took
 three years in big oil and it will take some time in E&P,"
 he said.
 
 Meyer pointed to Burlington Resources' move away from
 shallow water drilling and its substantial maintenance
 costs in the Gulf of Mexico as evidence of one "major
 portfolio shift." Apache, on the other hand, remains
 committed to growth, he said.
 
 Putting growth in perspective
 
 Wooing investors away from high-flying technology
 stocks into a sector that's slowing its growth won't be
 easy, said Meyer, adding that demand for E&P grows at
 2 percent a year "at best."
 
 "Not everyone needs to grow at 20 to 30 percent a year,"
 said Meyer. "There's a margin issue there that erodes
 your returns if you overcapitalize or overinvest and try to
 grow for the sake of growth's sake when it's way in
 excess of demand."
 
 Meyer noted that investors have many more choices
 outside of energy than they had in the last economic
 expansion. Then "it was okay to look at these guys in the
 context of explosive growth rather than the low to
 moderate growth cyclicals that they really are."
 
 While the Simmons report challenges the conventional
 wisdom about how to measure the sector, Pickering said
 the firm is still bullish on opportunities in E&P long
 term. "The market will always come back to a good
 story," he said. "The problem is you're trying to figure out
 what are the good stories in E&P and that's not clear. As
 the market figures it out, I think there'll be some
 interesting stocks."
 
 Kristen Gerencher is a personal finance reporter for
 CBS.MarketWatch.com.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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